WILLIAM CHRISTIE. "BY
the death of William Christie, President of the firm of Christie, Brown
& Co., Limited, Canada has lost one of her most successful business men.
Coming to Canada from Scotland in 1849, as a young man of 20, Mr.
Christie built up his business from year to year, until at the time of
his death he was at the head of the largest biscuit manufacturing
concern in Canada.

Mr. Christie was not only successful in his own business, but gave much
of his time and attention to questions of interest to the country at
large. He was for over 20 years a member of the Canadian Manufacturers'
Association, served on its committees for a number of years, and was at
one time Vice-President. In him the Association loses a valued member
and an enthusiastic friend. At the special meeting of the Executive, on
Tuesday, June 19th, the following message of condolence was sent to the
family of the deceased:

Dear Madam,—Whereas, God in His infinite wisdom has seen fit to remove
from our midst by death, our friend and associate William Christie, one
of the oldest members of our Association, and at one time its Vice-
President. We, as an Association, wish to pay
tribute to his sterling worth, his high character as a remarkable
member.

There really was a Mr. Christie.

Scottish apprentice baker William Mellis Christie co-owned his first
bakery in Toronto in 1853, five years after he arrived from Huntly in
Aberdeenshire. Five years later, he was winning awards for his cookies.

Christie went into partnership first with his father-in-law, James
McMullen, and then, in 1868, his former boss Alexander Brown (for whom
he worked when he first arrived), to expand the business.

Christie’s first bakery turned out more than 4,300 boxes of biscuits by
hand each year.

He took a keen interest in the quality of his product, which would lead
to the company slogan, “Mr. Christie, you make good cookies.” Among the
most popular Christie invention: “pirate” cookies, a combination of
oatmeal and peanut butter.

By the 1880s, Christie’s was the largest cookie and cracker maker in
Canada, the Canadian Encyclopaedia reports.

By 1890 in Toronto, the Dictionary of Canadian Biography reports, about
one of every five workers in the baking industry was employed by
Christie.

As his fortunes rose, the once poor baker’s apprentice joined Toronto
society and built a mansion for his family on Queen’s Park Cres. He
helped found what would become the Canadian National Exhibition in 1879.

Christie died in his Queen’s Park mansion in 1900; the family sold the
business in the 1920s and eventually it was taken over by the American
National Biscuit Co. (Nabisco) which is now owned by Kraft.

Mr. Christie first came to Toronto in 1848. He was still a teenager back
then, but he had already spent a few years as an apprentice to a baker
back home in Scotland. When he arrived in Canada, he got a job working
at a bakery on Yonge near Davisville. He’d spend his nights baking bread
and in the mornings he would push a handcart down into the nearby
village of Yorkville — still its own municipality back then — to sell
his goods.

Things went well. Within a few years, he owned his own company. He
partnered with his old boss and started winning awards for his cookies.
In 1860, when he just was 30 years old, Mr. Christie already employed a
staff of five people baking by hand. From there, the business expanded
quickly. By 1874, the steam-powered Christie, Brown and Company factory
took up an entire city block. (The building is still there between King
and Adelaide a block east of Jarvis; now it’s part of George Brown
College.) The business kept right on growing. By the time the 1800s drew
to a close, Mr. Christie employed two out of every three people in the
entire Canadian biscuit manufacturing industry.

When he died of cancer in June of 1900, William Mellis Christie was one
of the most famous businessmen in Canada. He’d built a fortune,
travelled around the world, and became a public figure in our city: a
trustee of the University of Toronto and a member of the Board of Trade.
Christie Street was named in his honour. His mansion stood in one of the
highest profile spots in Toronto: across the street from Queen’s Park at
the corner of Wellesley. That’s where he passed away. As he was laid to
rest in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, his son Robert inherited everything:
the money, the business and the Christie Mansion.

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